Common was born Lonnie Rashid Lynn, Jr. in Chicago on March 13, 1972 to Lonnie, Sr. a former pro basketball player, and Dr. Mahila Ann Hines, an educator. He started rapping while still in high school, forming a trio called C.D.R. which opened for acts like N.W.A. and Big Daddy Kane. He adopted the alias Common Sense by 1992 which is when he released his first CD, entitled โCan I Borrow a Dollar?โ He shortened his name to just Common after a lawsuit by a band claiming to have the exclusive trademark for โCommon Sense.โ
In 2002, he made his screen debut in Brown Sugar, and a year later he won his first Grammy for โLove of My Life,โ a duet he did with Erykah Badu for the same film. Since then, heโs made 7 more CDs, and appeared in such films as Smokinโ Aces, Dave Chappelleโs Block Party, American Gangster, Wanted, Street Kings and Date Night. Here, he talks about his new movie, Just Wright, a romantic comedy directed by Sanaa Hamri where he stars opposite Queen Latifah.
Common: Hey, peace Kam, how are you?
Kam Williams: All is well, thanks. I donโt know whether you remember but the last time we spoke I told you my son was taking saxophone lessons with your saxophonist, Justin Robinson.
C: Definitely, man. I hope heโs doing well.
KW: Heโs doing fine, thanks. How does it feel to be playing your first lead role as Scott McKnight in Just Wright?
C: It feels wonderful! This is something I dreamt of and prayed for. Itโs a blessing to get this opportunity to play a leading man. I feel like itโs the beginning of a new stage of my career as an actor.
KW: And how was it being directed by Sanaa Hamri and acting opposite Queen Latifah, Paula Patton, Phylicia Rashad and Pam Grier?
C: It was cool! These are beautiful, beautiful women. And it was great having Sanaa at the helm, because she brought a fresh perspective to the project in terms of her vision that made it easy for women to relate to it, given how my character was portrayed as sensitive and a good person. But, by the same token, she was also wise enough to balance that with his chi energy as an NBA player to attract a male audience as well.
KW: When is your new CD, โThe Believerโ being released?
C: The new studio album is coming out in the Fall, but I have a Greatest Hits album coming out May 25th.
KW: Larry Greenberg says, he would love to hear a musical collaboration by you and Queen Latifah. He wants to know whether thereโs any chance of that happening.
C: We already hooked up on a collaboration on that Greatest Hits album, itโs a new song featuring Queen Latifah called โThe Next Time.โ I think itโs the first of many duets weโll be doing. The song is soulful and makes you feel good. So, Iโm looking forward to doing more music with her, as well as more movies.
KW: Larry says, โYou seem to be involved in so many good causes from HIV/AIDS awareness to PETA. Is there any particular cause you want people to get involved in today?โ
?C: Yeah, my Common Ground Foundation [http://www.commongroundfoundation.org/], because itโs about empowering youth in a holistic way, and about helping to shape our leaders of tomorrow.
KW: Erik Daniels says, โI’m a big fan of Common and one of his songs that I like is Orange Pineapple Juice.โ He wants to know, when was the last time you had some?
C: Oh, I had some just the other day, mixed with Ciroc coconut, and it was great!.
KW: Childrenโs book author Irene Smalls asks, what is the hardest thing you have had to do in your career thus far?
C: I think the hardest thing Iโve had to do was to change my name from Common Sense to Common, not only because I was attached to it since it meant something to me, but because I was just beginning to build some name recognition when I had to deal with a lawsuit over it. That was one of the more traumatizing things Iโve experienced career-wise. It was like, โMan! How can somebody just take my name?โ Still, everything ultimately came together in divine time, and the name Common is very appropriate because my music represents everyday people. Common is right.
KW: โRealtor to the Starsโ Jimmy Bayan says he saw you shooting hoops in Roxbury Park in L.A. about a year ago. He wants to know if that was in preparation for this role?
C: Yes, I was. But it was so much fun preparing for the role that it wasnโt really work. I was just going out there to get my hoop game back up. Ask Jimmy this question back, โHow was my game at that point?โ
KW: Will do. Jimmy also wants to know, if you weren’t acting or doing music, what would you have become?
C: I believe a teacher. I always feel that I have something to say that will hopefully inspire.
KW: Amina Ross from Brooklyn says sheโs your biggest fan. She wants to know, what are your religious beliefs? If I remember correctly, youโre a member of Reverend Wrightโs church in Chicago.
C: Iโm a Christian. I believe in God, and Iโve been a member of that church, Trinity United Church of Christ since I was 8. I donโt live in Chicago anymore, so I donโt get there regularly. But I believe God exists in us all, so I donโt knock any other religions. I respect anyone with spiritual beliefs in a higher being.
KW: Amina Ross has a follow-up. Did you have to compromise you music to make it?
C: No, never. Iโve stayed true to who I was, as much as I could. There was one moment when a record label tried to get me to make some songs that sounded like Biggie and Nas, who were the hottest guys on the radio at the time, but I knew it would have to come from my soul to be a hit. One of my biggest songs, โThe Light,โ was just something I wrote because that was they way I really felt about somebody. So, I donโt think Iโve ever compromised myself.
KW: Maceo Torres-Trujillo asks whether your song โI Used to Love H.E.R.โ caused a rift between the East Coast and West Coast rap artists?
C: No, but it caused a situation between myself and Ice Cube and the Westside Connection. It started a little beef, but it ended up being resolved, and out of it we both came up with some good raps. They really felt that I was dissing the West Coast, but I love the West Coast. I grew up listening to both East Coast and West Coast.
KW: Professor Mia Mask asks, growing up, who were your role models?
C: Iโd say my mother, my Math teacher Mr. Brown, and Muhammad Ali.
KW: Professor Mask also asks, do you think black musical artists are misrepresented in the mainstream media?
C: Yeah, absolutely. Rap artists tend to be stereotyped in one way, as if they all wear chains, curse, flash money and abuse women. Itโs unfair not to look at them as individuals with different personalities. That

